HFT’s weld trailing shield
Published by Angharad Lock,
Digital Assistant Editor
World Pipelines,
When welding titanium using the GTAW / TIG process, the gas shield from the welding torch needs extending for protection from oxidation and for productivity. Although welders will use a larger than normal gas cup to provide a big surface area of protection, this still limits the speed at which they can move the welding torch.
To provide additional surface protection and in order to weld faster, Huntingdon Fusion Techniques HFT® manufacture a range of Weld Trailing Shields®, effectively long gas cups fixed onto and dragged along behind the welding torch, which ensures the weld remains under an argon gas shield until the metal has cooled below its oxidation temperature.
Ron Sewell, Chairman for HFT, said: “Professionally manufactured Weld Trailing Shields® are usually around 100 – 150 mm long as standard, with specials for automatic welding being as long as 450 mm (17”), although many applications require smaller Weld Trailing Shields®. With the lack of commercially available small Weld Trailing Shields®, users have been required to fabricate their own using innovative methods, however HFT® have now designed and developed the smallest Weld Trailing Shield® available at only 40 mm (1.6”) long.”
These devices attach to all standard manual or automatic TIG/GTAW and Plasma/PAW welding torches.
Edited from press release by Angharad Lock
Read the article online at: https://www.worldpipelines.com/product-news/02062016/hft-launch-smallest-weld-trailing-shield-181/
You might also like
World Pipelines Podcast: UK pipeline perspectives
In this episode, we look at the work of the Pipeline Industries Guild, in facilitating connections and learning for pipeliners of all kinds in the UK.
EIA: Natural gas pipeline project completions increase takeaway capacity in producing regions
Natural gas pipeline projects completed in 2024 increased takeaway capacity in the US natural gas-producing Appalachia, Haynesville, Permian, and Eagle Ford regions, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA)'s latest Natural Gas Pipeline Projects tracker.